Skip to main content

Page not found

We’re sorry — the page you are searching for cannot be found, because the page has moved, it no longer exists, or we mis-typed the hyperlink that led you here.
About searching
  1. Newsletter archive

    Newsletter archive Latest Ecofocus Newsletter: Fall 2023 Spring 2022 Fall 2021 Spring 2021 Fall …

  2. Herbivory

    … of our ecosystems.  http://www.caryinstitute.org/newsroom/emerald-ash-borer-and-other-invaders http://www.caryinstitute.org/newsroom/new-york-hotbed-damaging-forest-pests …

  3. Clarifying the Clean Water Act

    … Learn more in an essay by Strayer: www.caryinstitute.org/newsroom/cleaning-clean-water-act .

    0 comments

  4. Road salt: Protecting China’s drivers, but at what cost?

    … with excessive chloride ions entering the nearby spring that supplies the area’s reservoir. China …

    0 comments

  5. Living with wildfire: Q&A with Winslow Hansen, Forest Ecologist

    … people start the vast majority of fires. Between 1992 and 2012, people were responsible for starting 84% of all fires …

    0 comments

  6. Ashley Alred

    … make decisions about conservation issues. Since 2012, she has been an environmental educator in five …

    ltumblety - 01/25/2023 - 10:17

  7. Why you should brake for opossums

    … whenever possible, avoiding opossum collisions. July 23, 2012

  8. Animal reservoirs—where the next SARS-CoV-2 variant could arise

    … wrote in an article published in Nature this past spring. Such studies—and the current …

    0 comments

  9. July: Stay cool

    … to the low 50s, depending on where you are in Michigan). Spring-fed streams can be achingly cold, even in July. Trout … have big effects on lake physics and biology. In the spring, the sun warms the surface waters a little. At first, … As the climate warms, lakes stratify earlier in the spring and stay stratified later into the fall, so coldwater …

    0 comments

  10. Beech Bark Disease

    … foliage-eating beetle that was discovered in Nova Scotia in 2012. It is killing beech trees in forested and urban areas …

    0 comments